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Thanks for stopping by! I'm here to share all things Bookish and also news about Movies, TV Shows, and even Video Games I love! I love to read your comments :)


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Dying to Read (77)- BURNING KINGDOMS by Lauren DeStefano


Hey y’all thanks for stopping by to see my Dying to Read post and of course as always I have to give credit to the lovely Jill over at Breaking the Spine for the Waiting on Wednesday Meme!

This one has been on my TBR for a while I loved the first book and can't wait to read the second!

BURNING KINGDOMS
Lauren DeStefano
Release Date: March 10, 2015
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
ISBN: 978-1442480643
After escaping through the bottom of Internment, Morgan and her fellow fugitives aboard the great mechanical bird land on the ground to finally learn what has lived beneath their floating island home all these eons.

The ground is a strange place where water falls from the sky as snow, and customers watch moving pictures and visit speakeasies. A place where families can have as many children as they want, their dead are buried in vast gardens of bodies, and Internment is the feature of an amusement park. 

It is also a land at war. 

Everyone who fled Internment had their own reasons to escape their corrupt haven. But caught under the watchful eye of another king that wants to dominate his world, they wonder if coming to the ground will drag Internment down with them.



So what do you think? Will you be adding this to your pile? What are you dying to read this week?

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Top Ten Tuesday (3)- Top Ten Books/Movies To Read Or Watch To Get In The Halloween Spirit


Hi and welcome to my Top 10 Tuesday post! Looks like I'll be sticking with this one for a while since I enjoyed last week's post!

Thanks to the lovely ladies at The Broke And The Bookish for creating this weekly meme!

Here's this week's topic.

October 28: Top Ten Books/Movies To Read Or Watch To Get In The Halloween Spirit OR Top Ten Characters Who I Would Totally Want To Be For Halloween

I chose movies!

1. It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. A classic and even now that I'm an adult I still love it.

2. Hocus Pocus. Love Bette and SJP as witches! This one is super fun!

3.The Nightmare Before Christmas. It may be a Christmas themed movie but I think it's perfect for Halloween.

4. Practical Magic. This is one of my all time favorite movies so I watch it whenever lol but I definitely make sure to watch it during the Halloween season.

5. The Monster Squad. This one is from 1987 so yeah it's old but if you haven't watch it do so. It's got all the monsters and some really classic lines :)

6. The Crow. Another one of my all time favorites! Brandon Lee will always have my heart.

7. From Dusk Till Dawn. The Original none of the sequels. I love this whole cast!

8. The Cabin in The Woods. Loved this one it's a perfect Whedon flick it's got the right amount of gore and it's hilarious!

9. Zombieland. Because sometimes you need to watch Woody search for a twinkie lol and kill a ton of zombies.

10. Beetlejuice. Does this one need an explanation? Michael Keaton at his best!


So this is my list. What about you? What are some of your favorite Halloween movies?

And come back next week for Top Ten Books I Want To Reread (or if you don't reread...would reread in an ideal world)

Hugs,
Jaime

Monday, October 27, 2014

Blog Tour- MORTAL HEART by Robin LaFevers and a Giveaway!


Hey y'all I'm trilled to have Robin LaFevers here today to kick off the MORTAL HEART blog tour! I absolutely love this series it will go down as an all time favorite and I can't wait for everyone to read Anith's story. I have a post from Robin about Mortain's origins and why he isn't an evil god of death.  Oh how I love Death/Mortain in these books!!!. Oh and make sure to stick around and enter the giveaway! 

Haven't heard of MORTAL HEART? Check it out!



Title: MORTAL HEART
Author: Robin LaFevers
Pub. Date: November 4, 2014
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
Pages: 464
Formats: Hardcover, eBook
Annith has watched her gifted sisters at the convent come and go, carrying out their dark dealings in the name of St. Mortain, patiently awaiting her own turn to serve Death. But her worst fears are realized when she discovers she is being groomed by the abbess as a Seeress, to be forever sequestered in the rock and stone womb of the convent. Feeling sorely betrayed, Annith decides to strike out on her own.


She has spent her whole life training to be an assassin. Just because the convent has changed its mind doesn't mean she has...




Now on to the post!


The Origins of Saint Mortain

Oh that, Death! What a fascinating and misunderstood figure he is, as both Ismae and Sybella have already discovered. One of the questions I am most often asked is where did I get the idea for his character.

Well, the first answer is that the vast majority of cultures had some sort of death figure or personification of Death. And Mortain, just like the other Nine old gods in His Fair Assassin, was constructed from bits and pieces of lore from earlier Celtic gods and goddesses and seasoned liberally with embellishments of my own.

I knew absolutely that I did not want my god of death to be vengeful or punishing, for there are many indications that those views of death did not develop until the early middle ages. I have always been struck by how death was once viewed as part of the fabric of life, but during the middle ages, with the Black Plague and accounts of hell and damnation that grew ever more elaborate, it changed into something more akin to punishment and filled with terror.

Mortain in particular, was inspired not only earlier gods, but by the Breton folktale of the Ankou, a personification of death. Other influences upon which I drew heavily were: Arawn, lord and king of the Welsh Otherworld and the Irish god of the dead, Donn, who was also considered the father of the Irish people. He was known to be somewhat retiring and chose to remain aloof from the other Irish gods. According to some Christian accounts, the souls of the damned resided with him before departing for heaven or hell.

According to the Romans, the Gaulish Celts worshipped a god the Romans called Dis Pater. He was one of their primary gods and thought of as an ancestor to the entire race. What drew me in particular to the Dis Pater material was that it tied him to even older beliefs that enveloped not only death and the underworld, but the entire cycle of life and rebirth. He was believed to derive from an earlier god who not only ruled over the riches of the underworld, but fertility and regeneration, not unlike the Egyptian god Osiris. I liked the fullness of that concept, that death had both a rich, giving aspect as well as something that took loved ones away from us, which in turn became a thematic thread of the trilogy.



Thanks Robin this was awesome! 






About Robin:

Robin LaFevers was raised on a steady diet of fairy tales, Bulfinch’s mythology, and 19th century poetry. It is not surprising she grew up to be a hopeless romantic.

Though she has never trained as an assassin or joined a convent, she did attend Catholic school for three years, which instilled in her a deep fascination with sacred rituals and the concept of the Divine. She has been on a search for answers to life’s mysteries ever since.

While many of those answers still elude her, she was lucky enough to find her one true love, and is living happily ever after with him in the foothills of southern California.

In addition to writing about teen assassin nuns in medieval Brittany, she writes books for middle grade readers, including the Theodosia books and the Nathaniel Fludd, Beastologist series. You can learn more about those books at www.rllafevers.com.

Where you can find Robin:



Giveaway Details:


(1) One winner will receive a rustic arrow necklace, a leather bound notebook and a hardcover of MORTAL HEART! US Only.







a Rafflecopter giveaway




Check out the Tour Schedule for more awesome posts!

Week One:
10/27/2014- Two Chicks on BooksGuest Post
10/28/2014-Katie's Book BlogReview
10/29/2014- Once Upon a TwilightInterview
10/30/2014- Magical Urban Fantasy ReadsReview
10/31/2014- Reading YA RocksGuest Post

Week Two:
11/3/2014- Mundie MomsReview
11/4/2014- Tales of the Ravenous ReaderInterview
11/5/2014- The Starry-Eyed RevueReview
11/6/2014- Step Into FictionInterview
11/7/2014- ParajunkeeGuest Post

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Blog Tour- THE OPAL CROWN by Jenny Lundquist and a Giveaway!


Hey y'all I'm trilled to have Jenny Lundquist here for THE OPAL CROWN blog tour! I absolutely love this high fantasy series of hers and I can't wait for you all to see how it ends. I have a scene from the swoonworthy Stefan today. Oh and make sure to stick around and enter the giveaway! 

Haven't heard of THE OPAL CROWN? Check it out!



Title: THE OPAL CROWN (The Opal Mask #2)
Author: Jenny Lundquist
Pub. Date: October 28, 2014
Publisher: Running Press Kids
Pages: 368
Formats: Paperback, eBook

In the year since she was betrothed to the crown prince of Kyrenica, no one has suspected that the Masked Princess has been a decoy. That Elara, the secret twin sister, has been pretending to be                                          
Princess Wilha all along. The royal family has kept Elara’s identity hidden from the world, and for the girls, swapping lives has not been easy. Galandra is quickly declining, and the sisters continue to be a pawn in the Guardian’s ever-changing endgames.
     
But the stakes rise when Elara and Wilha’s younger brother, Andrei, takes the Galandrian throne after their father's death, and he reveals the girls' deception to Kyrenica’s royal family. Viewed as traitors, Elara and Wilha realize they are now fighting for their lives—and for their country. However, with only one crown and one throne to overthrow, Elara and Wilha must decide who will become queen. Or rather, the next savior for their people.
The sequel to the Princess in the Opal Mask.




Now on to the post!


Distant laughter echoes through the halls as Stefan Strassburg walks the corridor leading to his bride-to-be’s chambers. Behind him, a line of guards silently follow him.
          It is the longest walk of his life.
          Lord Royce’s words still ring in his ears: “They discussed sending a decoy to Kyrenica. We cannot be sure that the woman you are to marry is in fact Wilhamina Andewyn.”
          At first Stefan had laughed at the Guardian. For how could it be? No one could be that conniving, that deceitful. And yet…hasn’t he wondered at her slips in memory? At her strange mix of elegance and ignorance? At her fiery spirit, so at odds with everything he ever heard about Wilhamina Andewyn, the Masked Princess?
          He knocks on her door and she lets him in, while the guards wait behind. They make small talk, but he feels he must be giving himself away somehow, for her eyes are shifting around, like a cat caught among wolves. Would she look this way if she was innocent?
          “I had the most interesting message from your brother Andrei, accompanied by the most interesting messenger. Do you want to hear it?”
          He watches her as he relays the message. Her face drains of color, and she looks frightened. And all at once, he realizes he doesn’t need to hear her answer.  He was right to summon the guards. The message is true.
          The woman in front of him is an imposter.
          She doesn’t give in, not at first. But finally: “I’m not her. I’m not Wilhamina. But I swear I’m royal. I’m not just a look-alike. I’m Wilha’s—”
          “I don’t care who you are!” He pushes all his anger, all his hurt into his goblet. Then he hurls it at the wall and the glass shatters, just as he feels shattered. But there’s no sense of relief, no lessening of the pain raking his heart. She’s a liar, a manipulator.
          “Stefan, I can explain—”
          “Explain? I was falling in love with you,” he says and he can’t keep his voice from breaking. “I would have married you and spent my life trying to win your love in return.” For he’d always known she didn’t love him as he did her. But he didn’t care. He wanted her. It didn’t matter that their marriage was the key to keeping peace in the region—he wanted her, the girl who told such enthralling tales around the fire. The girl who seemed to genuinely love his sister. The girl who, it turns out, never existed at all.
But if he was honest, he’d thought he’d seen small sparks, small clues that her heart was softening to him, even if she rarely let her guard down.      But it must have all been lies; it was all in his head.
This woman didn’t love him, and never would.
          “Guards!”
          The guards enter and surround her, and he’s sickened as, in the course of a few minutes, she fades from a princess, and into a criminal. Ruby, his small, impressionable sister, bursts in, and even as he’s shouting, telling Ruby to stay away, already he’s thinking ahead, to what he knows will come next. What will happen when the others hear. Some will call for her execution.
And he knows no way to stop it.
         
Thanks Jenny for the awesome scene! 






About Jenny:

Jenny Lundquist grew up in Huntington Beach, California, wearing glasses and wishing they had magic powers. They didn't, but they did help her earn a degree in intercultural studies at Biola University. Jenny has painted an orphanage in Mexico, taught English at a university in Russia, and hopes one day to write a book at a café in Paris. Jenny and her husband live in northern California with their two sons and Rambo, the world's whiniest cat.




Giveaway Details:

(1)  Winner will receive a $25 Amazon or Barnes &Noble Gift card and a set of THE PRINCESS IN THE OPAL MASK and THE OPAL CROWN. US Only.

(4) Winners will receive a set of THE PRINCESS IN THE OPAL MASK and THE OPAL CROWN. US Only.






a Rafflecopter giveaway




Check out the Tour Schedule for more awesome posts!

Week One:
10/20/2014- Tales of the MarvelousReview
10/21/2014- The Reading Nook ReviewsInterview
10/22/2014- A Dream Within A DreamReview
10/23/2014- Two Chicks on BooksGuest Post
10/24/2014- The Paige-TurnerReview

Week Two:
10/27/2014- A Backwards Story- Interview
10/28/2014- Bibliophilia, PleaseReview
10/29/2014- Stories & Sweeties-Guest Post
10/30/2014- Jessabella ReadsReview
10/31/2014-  Me, My Shelf and I- Guest Post



Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Chapter Reveal- A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU by Claudia Gray and a Giveaway!


Hey y'all I'm super stoked to be taking part in this chapter reveal! Claudia Gray is one of my favorite authors, and people (hi Batman!) and this new book of hers, A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU is definitely one of my favorite books of the year and may just be my favorite book of Claudia's....EVER! I have chapter 3 for you today. If you haven't read the first 2 chapters make sure to check out the schedule below to read those and then come back here!

Oh and make sure to stick around and enter the giveaway! 

Haven't heard of A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU? Check it out!



Title: A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU
Author: Claudia Gray
Release Date: November 4, 2014
Pages: 368
Publisher: HarperTeen
Formats: Hardcover, eBook, audiobook

Every Day meets Cloud Atlas in this heart-racing, space- and time-bending, epic new trilogy from New York Times bestselling author Claudia Gray.

Marguerite Caine’s physicist parents are known for their radical scientific achievements. Their most astonishing invention: the Firebird, which allows users to jump into parallel universes, some vastly altered from our own. But when Marguerite’s father is murdered, the killer—her parent’s handsome and enigmatic assistant Paul—escapes into another dimension before the law can touch him.

Marguerite can’t let the man who destroyed her family go free, and she races after Paul through different universes, where their lives entangle in increasingly familiar ways. With each encounter she begins to question Paul’s guilt—and her own heart. Soon she discovers the truth behind her father’s death is more sinister than she ever could have imagined.

A Thousand Pieces of You explores a reality where we witness the countless other lives we might lead in an amazingly intricate multiverse, and ask whether, amid infinite possibilities, one love can endure.






Now on to chapter 3!



Chapter 3
I hug myself as I walk through the mist. It feels as though I’m splintering into a dozen directions at once—grief, then rage, then panic. The last thing I need right now is to lose it. Instead I force my mind to go to the place that always calms and centers me: painting.
If I were going to paint the dimension I see in front of me, I’d load my palette up with burnt umber, opaque black, a spectrum of grays—nothing brighter than that. I’d have to grind something into the paint with my thumb, some sort of grit or ash, because the grime here goes deeper than surfaces. Even the air feels dirty against my skin. There’s less old stone in this London than I remember, more hard metal. Fewer trees and plants, too. The chill in the air is sharp; this is early December, and yet I’m wearing only a short black dress and a flimsy jacket brighter than tinfoil.
(Yes, it’s definitely December. The devices allow dimensional travel, not time travel. “That’s another Nobel Prize altogether,” Mom once said cheerfully, like she might turn to it whenever she got a spare moment.)
Imagining painting helps a little, but my freak-out only halts when my ring starts blinking.
Startled, I stare down at the silvery band around my right pinky, which is shimmering in loops. My first thought is that it’s some kind of LED thing, meant for showing off in nightclubs. But if metal tabs on my jacket create holographic computers, what might this do?
So I reach over and tentatively give the ring a tap. The glow swirls out, a miniature spotlight, and a hologram takes shape in the space in front of me. I’m startled for the one instant before I recognize the face painted in the silver-blue shimmer: “Theo!”
“Marguerite!” He grins, relief shining from him as brilliantly as the hologram beams. “It is you, right?”
“It’s me. Oh, my God, you made it. You’re alive. I was so scared.”
“Hey.” His voice can sound so warm, when he wants it to; for all Theo’s faux arrogance—and his real arrogance—he sees more about people than he lets on. “Don’t waste any more time worrying about me, okay? I always land on the right side. Just like loaded dice.”
Even in the middle of all this, Theo is trying to make me laugh. Instead I feel a sudden lump in my throat. After the past twenty-four hours—a day in which my father died, my friend betrayed us, and I leaped out of my home dimension into places unknown—I’m running on empty. I say, “If I’d lost you, I don’t think I could have taken it.”
“Hey, hey. I’m fine. I’m absolutely fine. See?”
“You sure are.” I try to make it flirtatious. Maybe it works, maybe not. I kind of suck at flirting. At any rate, the attempt makes me feel steadier.
He becomes businesslike, or at least as businesslike as someone like Theo can get. His dark eyes—strangely transparent through the hologram—search my face. “Okay, so, you recently had a reminder, because you remember me. That or I’m making one hell of a first impression.” “No, I didn’t need a reminder. I remembered everything anyway.”
“You said you remembered yourself anyway?” He leans forward intently, temporarily distorting the holographic image. “No periods of confusion?”
“None. Looks like it’s that way for you too. Guess Mom was wrong about dimensional travelers forgetting themselves.”
But Theo shakes his head. “No. I needed—you know, I used a reminder right when I got here.”
“Weird.”
Theo seems slightly freaked by the fact that I remember things so easily. That works against all Mom’s theories—and, apparently, his own experience—but I guess traveling between dimensions is different for different people. Theories only get refined through experimentation. Mom and Dad taught me that much.
He says only, “Well, about time we caught a lucky break, because we were seriously overdue.”
“Where are you?”
“Boston. Looks like I’m at MIT in this dimension. I’m doing my best not to acknowledge all the Red Sox shirts in this closet.” Theo doesn’t care for sports at all—at least, in our dimension. “I thought I’d gone a long way, but damn, Meg. You landed all the way in London.”
Theo started calling me Meg a couple of months ago. I’m still not sure whether it’s annoying or cute. But I like how he always smiles when he says it. “How did you track me down so fast? Did you hack my personal information, something like that?”
He raises one eyebrow. “I searched for you online, found your profile, and put through a call request, which the local equivalent of Facebook offers as an option. When I called, you answered. Not exactly rocket science, and I say this as someone who seriously considered rocket science as a career.”
“Oh. Okay.” Well, that’s a relief. Maybe not everything has to be hard. Maybe we can catch the occasional break, and get lucky like we did this time.
Even though our devices are both set to follow in Paul’s footsteps, there are no guarantees. We could be separated at any jump. Not this time, though. This time Theo is with me. I look at his face, hazy in the ring’s glow, and wish he were here by my side already.
“Have you managed to . . .” Then my voice trails off, because for the first time I’m calm enough to realize I have an English accent now. Just like Dad’s.
Which makes sense, of course, because I live here. I guess speaking is a kind of muscle memory that lingers even while the other Marguerite’s consciousness is in the passenger seat, so to speak. But it hits me as the weirdest, coolest, funniest thing imaginable.
“Bath,” I say, relishing the short A of my new accent. “Baaaath. Privacy. Aluminium. Laboratory. Tomato. Schhhhhhedule.”
The giggles come over me, and I stop right there, hand against my chest, trying to catch my breath. I know I’m laughing mostly because I refuse to give in and start crying. The grief for my father has nowhere to go and is twisting every other mood I have into knots. And . . . tomahhhhto. That’s hilarious.
As I wipe away tears of laughter, Theo says, “You’re kinda shaky right now, huh?”
My voice is all squeaky as I try to hold it in. “I guess.”
“Well, if you were wondering, you sound adorable.”
The silly moment passes as soon as it came, replaced by anger and fright. This must be what the brink of hysteria feels like; I have to hold on. “Theo, Paul’s very close to London. If he knows we’ve come to this dimension, he could be on his way here, now.”
“What? How do you know that?”
“You’re not the only one who’s used a computer before, you know. I tracked Paul down at Cambridge.”
I look through the night at the harsh cityscape across the river, where the jagged dark outlines of skyscrapers dwarf the dome of the cathedral. Paul might be here already. How long would it take him to reach London?
Fiercely I remind myself that if Paul’s chasing me, it saves me the trouble of chasing him. The next time we meet, one of us is going to be sorry, and it won’t be me.
I must look murderous, because Theo says, “We have to remember one thing, okay? There’s a slim chance I calibrated wrong. We could have jumped into the wrong dimension. The Paul Markov in this dimension might not be our Paul. So we can’t overreact until we know the facts.”
What he’s really saying is, I can’t kill an innocent man. I’m not even sure I can kill the guilty one, though I mean to try. My limited skills with the Firebird mean I can’t tell the difference between our Paul and any other; it’s just one more reason I need Theo with me.
“How fast can you get here?” I ask.
Theo gives me that sly grin of his. “Already bought my ticket, Meg. Couldn’t take my pick of flights, traveling last minute—gotta go all the way to Germany and back again, so thanks, Lufthansa—but I should be there by midnight tomorrow. Fast enough for you?”
He’s already crossed a dimension to help me; now he’s going to cross half the globe, as fast as humanly possible, and the one thing Theo asks is whether he’s doing it all fast enough. I whisper, “Thank you.”
“We’re in this together,” Theo says, like it’s no big deal. “Listen, if I’ve figured these ring-phone things out, and I think I have, you can give me tracker access.”
“What is that?”
“Hold your ring up to the hologram, okay?” I do it. The ring glitters, and in the holographic screen, I can see his ring light up as well. Theo grins. “Okay. Now I can find you any time you’ve got that ring on, or you can find me. Once you figure out the interface, that is. Okay, where are you headed?”
“Home, I guess. Once I figure out where it is,” I laugh. Suddenly Theo looks stricken. Why should he look like that?
“Marguerite—” His voice is very quiet, very serious, not like the usual Theo at all.
Fear flickers stronger within me, and quickly I search for HENRY CAINE AND SOPHIA KOVALENKA. Results pop up instantly: physics papers, a few faculty photos from when they were younger, and video clips.
Video of the hovership accident from years ago, the one that killed three dozen people, including two promising scientists and their older daughter.
I don’t have Dad back. He’s dead here too. The only difference is that Mom is gone too. And Josie.
My whole family is dead.
I suck in a breath, hard, as if I’d been struck. As though at a great distance, I hear Theo’s voice say, “Marguerite? Are you okay?”
I don’t answer. I can’t.
The holographic screen helpfully starts showing me the video of the wreck, which apparently was a big thing on the news. Right now it feels like that explosion is happening inside my head, white heat and blinding light and everything I love, everyone who really loved me—Dad and Mom and Josie—burning to cinders.
It happened above San Francisco. The news articles say bits and scraps of the wreckage turned up as far away as Las Vegas, drifting down to earth, sometimes washed down with the rain.
“Marguerite?” The shimmering of the hologram doesn’t hide the concern on Theo’s face. “Your folks—I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. When I came to in this dimension, I looked them up first thing—thought they could maybe help us, you know? I didn’t realize you hadn’t learned what happened to them yet.”
My heart has been crying out for Dad, over and over, since the moment the police called our house. I’d even cherished a small hope of seeing him again here, at least a version of him.
But he’s still gone, still dead, and now Mom and Josie are as lost as he is.
They’re fine! I try to tell myself. That happened in this dimension, but not yours. When you go back home, Mom and Josie will be there waiting for you—it’s not like here, you didn’t lose everything, not absolutely everything—it’s going to be okay—
But it’s not. Dad is still gone.
“Why does anybody want to travel through dimensions, anyway?” I choke out. My fingernails dig into the flesh of my forearms, which are crossed in front of me like a shield. The physical pain keeps me from crying; no matter what, I refuse to cry. “They haven’t thought enough about what they might find.”
“I’m sorry,” Theo repeats. He looks like he wants to step forward through the hologram to get to me. “I’m so sorry.”
I think, Is this what you wanted, Paul? Did you hate them so much that you ran to a world where they were already dead? So your work would be done for you?
Once again I remember Paul’s unsmiling face, his gray eyes that seemed to stare through me. I remember the day he watched me painting, his gaze following every stroke my brush made on the canvas. It sickens me now to think that for a little while I almost—
Theo speaks again, his voice firmer this time. “That accident was a long time ago, and a lifetime away. You’ve gotta think of it like that. All right?”
His words break through my melancholy, bring me back to the now. “All right. Yes. It was just a shock. I won’t let it get to me again.”
He does me the courtesy of pretending to believe me. “Until tomorrow, hang in there and stay safe. And if you see Paul . . . don’t let him see you.”
The hologram blinks out. Though I stare down at my ring, hoping against hope that he’ll call back, it remains dull metal, silent and dark.
So I go home.
My blinky ring also has a GPS system, and when I ask it to guide me home, it does. I follow its directions without any idea of where I’ll end up.
Turns out home is in a particularly posh building—less garish than most of those around, but no less cold. The elevator is one of those glass ones on the outside, which I think are designed specifically to terrify the acrophobic. I expect to feel a little comforted when I walk inside, because her apartment must be, in part, my apartment too. But the minute I see it, I think that I’ve never seen any place that looked less like home.
It feels like an art gallery, but one of the ones that only shows weird, pop-kitsch art like rhinestone-studded cow skulls. Or maybe it’s like a hospital where they do plastic surgery on celebrities. Stark white and brushed metal, no soft seats, nothing comfortable or cozy, and so brightly lit you could see a single speck of dust—which I guess is the idea. I stand there, dripping wet from the rain, aware of myself as grubby, awkward, and misplaced.
Never could I have felt like I belonged here.
“Marguerite?” Aunt Susannah steps out from the hallway in a dressing gown as pristinely white as the decor. I guess I was put into the custody of my Aunt Susannah, of all people.
Her hair is loose, ready for bed, but still falls neatly to her shoulders as if it didn’t dare put one wisp astray. She doesn’t seem to be that different in this dimension. As she rubs some expensive cream into her face, she says, “You’re back awfully early tonight.”
It’s after one a.m. What time do I normally come home? “I was tired.”
“Are you feeling well?”
I shrug.
Aunt Susannah lets that go. “Best get to bed, then. You don’t want to make yourself ill.”
“Okay. Good night, Aunt Susannah.”
She pauses. Do I not say that to her often? I don’t sense maternal warmth from her; she’s not the maternal type. It’s not that I don’t love her—I do. And she loves me, too. But I’m guessing parenting didn’t come easily to her. Aunt Susannah says simply, “All right. Good night, dear.”
As she pads down the hall to her room, I go to the other door, to the room that must be mine.
It’s so—blank. Not as fancy as the rest of the flat, but there’s nothing about this space that makes me feel like it belongs to me. It might as easily be a room in a luxury hotel.
But that, I realize, must be the point.
The Marguerite who lost her family so young is one who has spent the rest of her life trying not to love anyone or anything that much again.
I haven’t decorated a bulletin board with postcards and prints of images I find inspiring. No easel stands in the corner with my latest canvas; do I paint in this dimension at all? No bookshelves. No books. Although I try to hope this dimension’s Marguerite has some kind of technologically advanced e-reader in her earrings or something, that’s beginning to seem unlikely. She doesn’t appear to be the bookish type.
The clothes in my closet include a lot of designer labels I recognize, and some I don’t, but I’d wager they’re high-end too. None of them are the kinds of things I’d wear at home—instead they’re all metallic or leather or plastic, anything hard and shiny. Maybe I ought to be enthused that the Caine family money apparently held out a couple of generations longer in this dimension, but all I can think about is how cold this life is.
Now I have to live in it.
My hand closes around the Firebird locket. I could take it off now if I wanted, since it doesn’t seem I need the reminders. But even the thought of being separated from it terrifies me. Instead I close my eyes and imagine that it could help me fly away to a new place, not this life or my old life, but some newer, shinier reality where everything is okay and nothing can hurt me ever again.
My legs seem to give out, and I flop down on the immaculately made bed. For a long time I lie there, curled in a ball, wishing to be home—my real home—more desperately than I’d known I could ever wish for anything.

Can't wait to read chapter 4 now right?? Make sure to go to Fangirlish tomorrow to read it!






About Claudia:

Claudia Gray is a pseudonym. I would like to say that I chose another name so that no one would ever learn the links between my shadowy, dramatic past and the explosive secrets revealed through my characters. This would be a lie. In truth, I took a pseudonym simply because I thought it would be fun to choose my own name. (And it is.)
I write novels full-time, absolutely love it, and hope to be able to do this forever. My home is in New Orleans, is more than 100 years old, and is painted purple. In my free time I read, travel, hike, cook and listen to music. You can keep up with my latest releases, thoughts on writing and various pop-culture musings via TwitterTumblrPinterestGoodreads or (of course) my own home page.

If you want to contact me, you can email me, but your best bet is probably to Tweet me. I don’t do follows on Twitter, but I follow everyone back on Tumblr, Pinterest and Goodreads.



Giveaway Details:

(1) One signed copy of A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU and one poster. International





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Chapter Reveal Schedule

10/20/2014- Novel NoviceChapter 1
10/21/2014- Alice MarvelsChapter 2
10/22/2014- Two Chicks on BooksChapter 3
10/23/2014- FangirlishChapter 4




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